OMAHA, Neb. - After throwing 5 2/3 innings three days prior, common sense said that Erik Averill wouldn't have much left in the tank for a start against No. 7 national seed Florida on Wednesday. But common sense has said a lot of things about Averill, and he doesn't tend to listen.

The junior left-hander tossed a complete game five-hitter as ASU defeated Florida 6-1 to move one win away from the College World Series' championship series. If the Sun Devils (42-24) beat the Gators again Thursday, they will face off against the winner of Baylor and Texas for the national championship.

The Arizona Board of Regents unanimously approved on Thursday ASU's request to initiate eminent-domain proceedings for the empty property at 740 E. Apache Boulevard that once was the site of Timberwolf Pub & Grill.

The motion came despite the objections of local real-estate lawyer and ASU adjunct professor Grady Gammage, Jr., attorney for the property's current owner, Ray Evans.

The ASU Meal Plan Committee debated an exemption and appeal process for a plan that could require meal plans for all first-year students living on campus, tentatively set to start in fall 2006, during a meeting Tuesday.

Mike Matthies, food service contracts and projects manager for ASU, said there would be some "special cases."

The numbers for ASU's Tuffy Gosewisch in the first two games of the College World Series won't jump out at you.

Then again, they hardly ever do.

The senior catcher has gone a combined 2-for-8 in games against Nebraska and Tennessee with two RBIs and a run scored. And while it doesn't sound like much, when and how the numbers came about play a large role in why the Sun Devils had a chance to beat the Cornhuskers and why their postseason hopes are still alive.

A young girl looks on from a swing at the Orphanage of Hue in Vietnam. The orphanage is said to hold between 75 and 100 children at any given time, and serves as a safe haven for children with no place to go.

In a place where white teeth signify savagery and close to 30 percent of its population lives in poverty, Vietnam has a new story to tell. Documentary photographer David Stone, an ASU alumnus, spent three weeks overseas gathering breathtaking images to help with this task.

Vietnam boasts thousands of tourists each year that want to view the untouched landscape. But the land is not all beauty. Scattered with a tumultuous past, the permanent effects of the Vietnam War are still evident -- men and women with missing limbs and broken buildings and families that have never been repaired.